Macon Phillips, Special Assistant to the President and Director of Digital Strategy 2009-2013: “This combination of preparation and humanity in this shot of Chief McDonough's binder sums up the unique culture of the Obama White House. After this photo was made into a "jumbo" and hung on the wall in the West Wing, we started seeing pictures and art on the front of other colleagues' binders: motivational reminders that the next generation was counting on our progress.”Pete Souza&mdash;The White House

Macon Phillips, Special Assistant to the President and Director of Digital Strategy 2009-2013: “This combination of p

The Photos That Moved Them Most: The Obama Administration

Large 20x30 prints, known as jumbos, line the walls of the West Wing and the cramped offices of the EEOB (the Eisenhower Executive Office Building of the White House). Photography has played an important role in the White House for decades, but beginning with Obama's administration, an unprecedented number in the thousands have been made available for public consumption.

In April 2009, the White House's photo office released on Flickr 291 photos celebrating the President’s first 100 days. The idea was to be transparent and show what life behind the gates of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue was like – from the President's first morning meeting to his walk home along the Colonnade at night.

Since then, with the proliferation of social media, Pete Souza, the president's chief photographer and leader of the White House photo team, has shared his photographs widely on Flickr, Instagram and Medium. Fueled by social media, these pictures have been passed and shared and many have become viral sensations now etched in our minds.

For the hard working staffers, who spend long hours at the White House in less than glamorous quarters, these pictures are a reminder of the historic nature of their work. Like a living yearbook, they are surrounded by the memories of the highs and lows – the drudgery and the inspirational, the mundane and the fun.

TIME asked eight White House staffers – from Josh Earnest to Valerie Jarrett – to name their favorite picture taken by Souza, the President’s ever-present shadow.